Lost&Found
We are a newly formed collective of artists and curators brought together by a shared commitment to collaborative, socially engaged practices. Each of us brings prior experience in collective and/or participatory work. Together, we’re applying for studio space at Haus der Statistik to develop a long-term, process-based project that addresses themes of transit, displacement, memory, and transformation.
Our collective practice blends social experimentation with identity work, archival research, and storytelling. We’re interested in the tension between visibility and invisibility—what is remembered, forgotten, or remains latent. Open archives, participatory formats, and humor are central to our work.
We value hybrid approaches and intentional distortions, treating misunderstanding and failure as generative. The studio will become a platform for shared authorship, experimentation, and peer-building.
We aim to amplify the voices of those often unheard: people forced to start over—due to displacement, burnout, social exclusion, or unstable environments. This includes refugees navigating fragile integration processes, teenagers from precarious family situations, and neurodiverse children marginalized by institutional structures.
Most of us are Ukrainian and currently living through many of these challenges. This lived experience gives us not only insight, but urgency and legitimacy in our work. Being part of the Haus der Statistik community would help us connect with broader networks, support others in similar transitions, and ease our own integration—breaking the isolation we often experience.
Current participants are: Kateryna Berlova, Ivars Gravlejs, Anna Scherbyna and Nastia Hrychkovska.
We are a newly formed collective of artists and curators brought together by a shared commitment to collaborative, socially engaged practices. Each of us brings prior experience in collective and/or participatory work. Together, we’re applying for studio space at Haus der Statistik to develop a long-term, process-based project that addresses themes of transit, displacement, memory, and transformation.
Our collective practice blends social experimentation with identity work, archival research, and storytelling. We’re interested in the tension between visibility and invisibility—what is remembered, forgotten, or remains latent. Open archives, participatory formats, and humor are central to our work.
We value hybrid approaches and intentional distortions, treating misunderstanding and failure as generative. The studio will become a platform for shared authorship, experimentation, and peer-building.
We aim to amplify the voices of those often unheard: people forced to start over—due to displacement, burnout, social exclusion, or unstable environments. This includes refugees navigating fragile integration processes, teenagers from precarious family situations, and neurodiverse children marginalized by institutional structures.
Most of us are Ukrainian and currently living through many of these challenges. This lived experience gives us not only insight, but urgency and legitimacy in our work. Being part of the Haus der Statistik community would help us connect with broader networks, support others in similar transitions, and ease our own integration—breaking the isolation we often experience.
Current participants are: Kateryna Berlova, Ivars Gravlejs, Anna Scherbyna and Nastia Hrychkovska.